Women on Air welcomed at RTÉ

Broadcaster holds confidence-boosting training event for female experts

Moya Doherty (left) with Women on Air chairwoman Caroline Erskine, broadcasters Áine Lawlor and Ursula Halligan and Women on Air founder Margaret E Ward (right), in the grounds of RTÉ. Photograph: Robbie Reynolds
Moya Doherty (left) with Women on Air chairwoman Caroline Erskine, broadcasters Áine Lawlor and Ursula Halligan and Women on Air founder Margaret E Ward (right), in the grounds of RTÉ. Photograph: Robbie Reynolds

Women on Air, the campaign group for better gender representation in broadcast media founded by journalist and Clear Ink chief executive Margaret E Ward, received official industry recognition of sorts yesterday, as RTÉ hosted a free one-day training event in conjunction with the organisation.

RTÉ's involvement in the training day was the initiative of the outgoing managing director of radio, Clare Duignan, who said women were less represented on Irish airwaves than they should be "for a number of reasons", among them "lack of confidence and media experience".


Presenting rosters
Those speaking at the training day, which was aimed at female professionals in economics, science, technology, the arts and other areas, included RTÉ broadcasters Áine Lawlor and Claire Byrne, former Tánaiste Mary Harney, TV3 political editor Ursula Halligan and Riverdance producer Moya Doherty – none of whom could be said to lack confidence or media experience.

Supporting campaigns to increase the proportion of women contributors to on-air current affairs discussions is an important move by the national public service broadcaster.

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But perhaps RTÉ’s next managing director of radio will endeavour to make the presenting rosters on its flagship stations more representative of the population too.

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery is an Irish Times journalist writing about media, advertising and other business topics